Zero to Well-Read

"Bartleby, the Scrivener" by Herman Melville

Jan 27, 2026
They unpack Bartleby’s iconic refusal and why “I would prefer not to” still unsettles readers. They probe the story’s slippery meanings and its status as a literary Rorschach test. Historical context and Melville’s career frame the tale. They map workplace dynamics, silence as projection, and surprising comparisons to Kafka, Twain, and theatrical adaptations.
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INSIGHT

Bartleby As A Rorschach Test

  • Bartleby acts as a Rorschach test that reveals more about readers than the text itself.
  • Jeff O'Neill and Rebecca Shinsky stress that the story resists a single, correct interpretation.
INSIGHT

Free Will Versus Predestination

  • Bartleby was published during the American Renaissance and engages questions of free will versus predestination.
  • Rebecca links that cultural moment to tensions about opting out and responsibility in mid-19th-century America.
ADVICE

Read It Live In Your Book Club

  • Use Bartleby as a short, live read for book clubs to spark discussion without homework.
  • Jeff recommends reading it together then discussing to avoid pre-formed interpretations.
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